Yes, it would be pz: ml= 0, px: ml=-1 and py: +1
The values of the magnetic quantum number depend on the value of the azimuthal quantum number (orbital angular momentum quantum number) and has values -l, .. 0 . ..+l l=1, p orbital, -1, 0, +1 - three p orbitals l=2 d orbital -2, -1, 0., +1,+2 five d orbitals etc.
The numeric values get larger as you move away from zero on the number line. Say for example starting at -2 if you move right from there to -1 the numeric value of that number is actually smaller, not larger.
What disadvantages are there to using parametric equations for numeric values?
Yes you can.
Numeric array has numbers(+integers) that represent the values Associative array has strings that represent the values
The values of the magnetic quantum number depend on the value of the azimuthal quantum number (orbital angular momentum quantum number) and has values -l, .. 0 . ..+l l=1, p orbital, -1, 0, +1 - three p orbitals l=2 d orbital -2, -1, 0., +1,+2 five d orbitals etc.
-l to l, so given l=2 (d orbital) the values for ml will be -2, -1, 0, +1, +2
The magnetic quantum number ml depends on the orbital angular momentum (azimuthal) quantum number, l, which in turn depends on the principal quantum number, n. The orbital angular momentum (azimuthal) quantum number, l, runs from 0 to (n-1) where n is the principal quantum number. l= 0 is an s orbital, l= 1 is a p subshell, l= 2 is a d subshell, l=3 is an f subshell. The magnetic quantum number, ml, runs from -l to +l (sorry this font is rubbish the letter l looks like a 1) so for an f orbital the values are -3. -2, -1, 0, +1, +2, +3, so 7 f orbitals in total. ml "defines " the shape of the orbital and the number within the subshell.
"l" is known as the angular momentum quantum number. Principal Quantum Number = n Angular Momentum " " = l Magnetic " " = ml Spin " " = ms (Only possible values are 1/2 and -1/2) Search "Permissible Values of Quantum Numbers for Atomic Orbitals" for the values. You basically have to understand the concepts & be able to recreate the chart for tests, otherwise you can blindly memorize it. The chart should be in your book.
The numeric values get larger as you move away from zero on the number line. Say for example starting at -2 if you move right from there to -1 the numeric value of that number is actually smaller, not larger.
For a principle quantum number 3, there are three possible sub-shells. These are 3s, 3p, 3d. Azimuthal quantum no. is less than principle quantum number. There for 3s it is 0, for 3p it is 1, for 3d it is 2.
What disadvantages are there to using parametric equations for numeric values?
Since social security numbers have numeric values, a social security number is an example of a qualitative variable.
50000 is a numeric value.
Yes you can.
In theory, the number of electrons with each quantum number is not limited. However, for any given "main quantum number" (n), the number of electrons having the other quantum numbers is limited - but it depends on the value of "n". For more information, the Wikipedia article on "quantum number" seems to give a good overview.
It would depend on the context that the number is used.